Syrian Kurdistan
0 sources
Syrian Kurdistan
Summary
Syrian Kurdistan is a cultural region[1]. It draws 157 Wikipedia views per month (cultural_region category, ranking #29 of 59).[2]
Key Facts
- Syrian Kurdistan is in the country of Syria[3].
- Syrian Kurdistan's image is recorded as Map detail showing Syrian Kurdistan in 1935.jpg[4].
- Syrian Kurdistan's instance of is recorded as cultural region[5].
- Syrian Kurdistan's instance of is recorded as Kurdish-inhabited area[6].
- Syrian Kurdistan's shares border with is recorded as Turkish Kurdistan[7].
- Syrian Kurdistan's shares border with is recorded as Iraqi Kurdistan[8].
- Syrian Kurdistan's GND ID is recorded as 4807373-8[9].
- Syrian Kurdistan's locator map image is recorded as Claimed and de facto territory of Rojava.png[10].
- Syrian Kurdistan's part of is recorded as Kurdistan[11].
- Syrian Kurdistan's has part is recorded as Democratic Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria[12].
- Syrian Kurdistan's described by source is recorded as The Kurdish Project[13].
- Syrian Kurdistan's described by source is recorded as Washington Kurdish Institute[14].
- Syrian Kurdistan's partially coincident with is recorded as Democratic Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria[15].
- Syrian Kurdistan's different from is recorded as Democratic Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria[16].
- Syrian Kurdistan's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/11jpdsyjk6[17].
- Syrian Kurdistan's Lex ID is recorded as Rojava[18].
- Syrian Kurdistan's IMDb keyword is recorded as syrian-kurdistan[19].
Body
Geography
Syrian Kurdistan is in the country of Syria[3]. Its part of is recorded as Kurdistan[11].
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include cultural region[5] and Kurdish-inhabited area[6].
Why It Matters
Syrian Kurdistan draws 157 Wikipedia views per month (cultural_region category, ranking #29 of 59).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 11 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[20] It is known by 18 alternative names across languages and contexts.[21]